THE JEFEERSONIAN. 1.4 JOenatcJr ta )oKtics, literature, 2tgricnlturc, Science, iHornlity, axxb eucral 3taclligcitfx VOL. 24. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA MAY 25, 1865. NO. iir Published by Theodore Schoelu ru no i w unit! o i m. v. nvf JOB PRINTING, OF ALL KINDS, (atcd ift the highest style of the Art,nd on ths most readon'tble terms. OUR BOYS ARE COMING HOME. Thank God, the sky is clearing ! The clouds arc burring past; Thank God the day is ncaring ! The dawn is coming fast. And when glad herald voices Shall tell us peace has come, This thought shall most rejoice us, "Our boys are coming homo !" Soon shrill the voire of singing Drown war's tremendous din ; Soon shall the joy-bells ringing Bring peace and freedom in. The jubilee bonfires burning Shall soon light up the dome, And toon, to soothe our yearning, Our boys are coming home. The vacant fireside places Have waited for them long ; The love-light lacks their face?, The chorus waits their song ; A shadowy fear has haunted The long-deserted' room ; But now our prayers arc granted, Our bo3s are coming home. O mother, calmly waiting For that beloved son ! O sister, proudly dating The victories he has won ! O maiden, softly humming The love song while you roam Joy, joy, the boys are coming Our boys arc coming home ! And yet oh, keenest sorrow ! They're coming, but not all ; Full many a bark to-morrow Shall wear its sable pall For thousands who are sleeping Beneath the empurpled loam; Woe ! woe ! for those we're weeping, Who never will come home ! 0 sad heart, hush thy grieving ; Wait but a little while ! With hoping and believing Thy woe and fear beguile. Wnit for the joyous meeting Beyond the starry dome. For there our boys are waiting To bid us welcome home. Pensions. The following item should be preserved, as showiug to whom pensions may be granted. Those entitled to pensions are. 1 Invalids, disabled since March 4th, 18(51, in the military or naval ser Tire of the United States, while in the Hue of duty. 2. Widows of officers, soldiers and sea men, who have died of wounds received, or disease contracted in service as above. 3. Children undersixtecn j'ears of ago, of either of the aforesaid deceased per- cons, if thcre is no widow surviving, or from the time of the widow's re-mar- SI rtage. 4. Mothers -of officers, soldiers and seamen, deceased as aforementioned, and who were dependent upon the sons" for support, in whole or in part. 5. .Sisters under sixteen years of age, dependent on said deceased brother, wholly or in part for support, provided there are none of the last three classes above mentioned. Invalids and friends of deceased sold iers are reminded that in order to have Mid pension commence when the service terminated, the application therefore must be made within oue year of the discharge of the invalid or decease of the officer, soldier, seamen, or as the case may be. llates of Pensons. Lieutenant Colo nel and officers of higher rank, 830 per month ; Major, 25 per month ; Captain, $20 per month : First Lieutenant, 817 per month : Second Lieutenant, $15 per. month; all enlisted men 89 per month lt'dwnibchirgcJ0f thoycsu,two hilars and mfy: tor, to the hangman, as lie was about be- N paper discontinued until all arrearages arc paid, ing SCIlt into etcmity. He wanted to trcept at the option of the Editor. !dron "irraduallv " Thorp nrn rliniKsinrlq rOWlvertiscments of one square of (eight lines) or j"!' fcrau uauy. xnere are tllOUSanas ltii, on or three insertions $i 50. Earh additional of speculators and otbers now in the same ertion, 50 cents. Longer ones in proportion. ,'COndition. Thcy gol(j and vniy one full pension will be allowed to he could not do so at present, as he Jiaa the relative of a decased soldier, and in I to attend a meeting of the board of bro the order of precedence, as above given. ) kers that afternoon, and if the members Applications from Pennsvlvania mavlnf'rhn board sot a smell of ile upon him, be sent to Colonel Frank Jordon, Mili - tary State Agent for Pennsylvania, Eleve-'five - nth Street, Washington city who will auena to them without charge to the ap plicant. The Whipple Company,, whose works ore st Ballard Vale. Massachusetts, cm- v.1 nt.n , nr 1 J l'iop uou men and boys, and 20 gins, ana , turn out 500 dozen files daily. Arrange-1 nenls are now in progress which will dou - u'e the number. A sculptor of some notoriety, and no jn the course of action. Better by far txcess of loyalty, applied to Secretary adopt some course and pursue it energeti tanton for permission to take a cast of cally even though it may not be the best, booth's head. The blunt war minister than to kcep continually thinking without replied : "Better take care of your own action. "Go ahead" ought to be printed taad." jn every young man's hat, and read un- j till it becomes a part of his nature, until pt. Sharp, of St. LouiSj has been ap-;he can act upon his judgement, and not pointed postmaster of Richmond. jbc turned from his course by every wind . .mt of interested advice. In conclusion, we Senator Sumner is to deliver an eulogy would say "Think before you act ; but on President Lincoln in Boston, on the when the time for action comes, stop think Erst day of June. ' iuS-" . "Drap me Aisy. "Drap mo aisy," said a poor malefac- I nicrcnanaise, generally, suould go down, provided it does not harm them. Each man cries out, "Drap rae aisy. V The gold speculator, tremulous and pale with excitement, says, "Drap me aisy." Eve ry holder of cotton, a3 it "goes tumbling down," loudly prays "Drap me aisy." Every pork and beef speculator says, "Drap me aisy." The whole army of capitalists, bankers and business men are hoarse with the cry, "Drap me aisy." Over against this crowd are the common people, the great multitude, and they say to falling prices, Come quickly 1" Con sumers now demand "low figures." A good time is coming, say they, and now we will take our turn. The poor me chanic, who has paid sevonty cents a pound to butter now has hope. his bread on Sunday, He says "Hurry up Making haste slowly If gold goes down in your low prices I does not'suit him. proportion, and the prospects brighten that the long-looked-for "solid basis" is at hand. What is gold good for? You cannot eat it drink it, or wear it. It is not wan ted to ship to Europe. It is not wanted by the Government to pay interest. It is not wanted by importers to pay duties. It is not at present wanted by the banks to redeem their circulation. It is only wanted by one single class of our fellow citizens the speculators the bulls to day and the bears to-morrow, in Wall street. We say, let them haveMt 7 When gold went up, business men made for tunes by monopolizing merchandize, man ufactures uiade fortunes by advancing prices, stock-speculators made fortunes so that millionaires were, at one time, "as plenty as blackberries." Gold gamblers made fortunes by buying and hoarding every ducat they could lay hands on. Outside of the aforesaid ranks stood thousands crying madness ; as food and raiment went up higher. They then demanded more and more pay for their labors. Starvation prices at length star ed them in the. face. We had rebels North as well as South. Buyers rebelled at high prices, at hundred per cents, pro Gts, and at fortunes made in a day. Happily the tables are now turned, and who expects the masses of the people to mourn i Nobody but fools. Cheap bread and meat m any intelli gent community insure prosperity. Let us have prosperity, there, for the people is a whole, even if some must suffer. uesay, in conclusion, Down with the price ot goal, Down witn tne price or dry goods. Down with the price of bread and meat. Down with the price of cloth ing. Down speedily with the price of everthing, until we come to a gold basis. "Gradual emancipation" is better than nothing, but whoever asks for it will not find himself just on the "popular side." Prices must continue to go down, down, down, until the banks and the Govern ment resume specie payment; and that glorious era cannot come a minute to quick. Independent. Petroleum vs. Toothache. This city is the grand centre for gold, oil and coal speculators. The Girard House is the sceue of many an interest ing speculation. Every man you meet there has just the biggest thin in Penn sylvania in the shape of one of these lot teries. Harry Kanega, mine hoatof the Girard, relates the following joke, and as it illustrates the popularmania, we add it to the long catalogue of anecdotes relat ing to oil : "A gentleman, apparently in great agony, holding his hand to his face, was walking up and down the corridor, when he was approached by a symaptlnzing stranger, who kindly inquired what the trouble was. The sufferer replied that he was sorely afflicted with the toothache. The sympathetic gentleman at once re commended the application of crude petroleum to the diseased grinder, and producing a bottle of the sweot-smclling liquid, auYJaeu mm w try it ui uuw, .l .. . If -i ...I I the same time telling him it would relieve him instantly. The sufferer replied that . they would have a pump in his mouth in minutes. Sunday Mercury. -- - o . . . .. . ' General Jackson's Motto. "Think before you act, but when the time for action comes, stop thinking." This is the true doctriue. Many men I'll! III J11U UUU JiU uun u w .0.... ...... , MnBtnA nrnsnftfit of hanniness fail in life and go down to the grave with unalized because they did not adopt j , th- molto Nothing so and act upon this motto nnr,nn a flimifrbr. t)renares a man for action as but nothinir so unfits a man for action A Remarkable Prophecy. Not long ago was found at Toledo, in Spain, in a monastery, a paper contain ing the following prophecy : "In the far west, beyond the ocean, will rise a nation which will be great in power and wealth, and Satan, in one of his walks to and fro in the earth, will observe this nation, and, determined to destroy their happiness, will there send two monsters, one to the North and the other to the South, and he will give them strawberries, and they will eat them j and, after- t"hey have eaten, they" will feel a great thirst, not to be quench ed with anything but blood. They will. therefore, cause the brother slay the bro ther, the father to slay the son, and the son the father, and they will drink the blood of the slain, and it will bring la mentation and wailing throughout the land. And when the time is fulfilled, there will arise a strong man in the North, who will take the monsters and bind them and draw them into the sea, where it is tho deepest, and peace and happiness will again prevail throughout, and the people will praise the Lord" It is said that the monks in the above monastery maintained that this prophecy was written before the discovery of A merica by Christopher Columbus ; that Ferdinand and Isabella were, in the main, induced to fit out the ship for Columbus, and that the first part of it is fulfilled in America, and that the other part will soon come to pass. Wonders of Geology. More than nine thousand different kinds of animals have been changed into stone. The races or genera of more than half of these are now extinct, not being at present known in a living state. From the remains of some or these ancient animals, they must have been larger than any living animals now known upon the face of the earth. The Megatherium, (Great Beasts) says Buckland, from a skeleton nearly perfect, in the Museum at Mardrid, was perfectly colossal . With a head and neck like those of a sloth, its legs and feet exhibit those of the armadillo and the anteatcr. Its fore feet were'a yard in length and more than twelve in ches wide, terminated by gigantic claws, its thigh bone was nearly three times as thick as that of the elephant, and its tail nearest the body, was six feet in circum ference. Its tusks were admirably fitted for cutting vegetable substances, and its general structure and strength were in tended to fit it for digging in the ground for roots, on which it principally fed. A Hew Use for Old Nails. It is stated as a new discovery that wonderful effect may be obtained by wa tering fruit trees and vegatables with a solution of sulphate of iron. Under this system beans will grow to nearly double the size, and will acquire .a much more savory taste. The pear seems to be par ticularly well adapted for this treatment. Old nails thrown into water and left to rust there will impart to it all the ne cessary qualifications of forcing vegetation as described. A school boy down East, who was no ted among his play fellows for his frolics among tho girls, was reading in the Old Testament, when coming to the phrase, "making waste places glad," he was ask ed what it meant. The youngster paus ed, scratching his head, but gave no an swer, when up jumped a more precious urchin, and cried out "I know what it means, master. It means huggin the gals ; for Tom Ross is allers huggin' 'em around the waist, and it makes 'cm glad as can be." A Methodist clergyman of Des Moines recently gave utterance to the following petition on the Sabbath : "Oh, Lord I may intemperance, cease in our land ! Especially may it cease among our of ficers and rulers j but, oh Lord, if thcy are determined to get drunk in spite of all Thy warnings to the contrary, we be seech Thee not to permit them all to get drunk at one time 1" Threo weeks ago George N. Sandars promised to come to New York to chas tise the editor of the Times if the Gov ernment would give him permission. The permission is granted. And so anxious are the authorities at Washington to look upon his lovely countenance that they are willing to pay the handsome sum of twenty-five thousand dollars for the priv ilege. John C. Fremont has bought a coun try seat at Tarrytown, N, Y. A.young Irish lady challenges the world to a trial in archery. It is prophecied that the coming sum mer will bo the hottest in ten years. The municipal debt of AlbaDy is $1, 580,000. A gang of horse thieves are said to be infesting-Franklin county. The New York policemen arc to have a new uniform, made of blue flannel. Three of the loyal StatesCalifornia, - 3 KT An lmiA nr nntinnnl VMtjU" UUU uvuua tiiut uunu .c.. banks. u v, '. ' - J A DAY IN PETTICOATS. BY A MODEST YOUXQ MAN. "I couldn't think of such a thing !" "But you must. My happiness de pends on it. Here, put the thingum bobs ; and the what's his name." And my friend Bob Styles, held up be fore my hesitant gaze a whole suit of fem inine apparal. His idea was that I should personate his lapy love for one day, to prevent any body from suspecting the truth namely, that she had joined him in a runaway marriage party until it should be too late for interferance ; that is, until the minister should have tied a knot between them that nothing but death or a special grant of the Legislature could untie. This scheme was not actually so absurd as it appeared at urst sight. Maggie Lee was a tall, queenly woman, with an almost masculine air, and at that time, I bad a very slight form almost effemi nate, so that in fact, there was really but jitue ainerence in mat point. xnen 1 had light hair parted in the middle, and put a bonnet on my head and few per sons would suspect that I was not of the softer sex. These accessories also gave me quite a decided resemblance to Mag gie Lee, especially when, as in this case, the disguise was her own. Then the day chosen for tho runaway match was an auspicious one. Maggie's pa was to drive her to D , a small vil lage near where she lived, and there she was to join a sailing party down D river, to the grove three miles below, from which the party was to return in the evening in carriages. Our plan was that I should bo waiting in the village, and should go on tho boat doned that pleasure and persuaded Jcn- with the sailing party, while Maggie, af ter leaving her father, should slip off with Bob Styles, across the country. At last I got dressed, and presented myself before Maggie, blushing a great deal I believe, feeling very much about the waist, and with an uncomfortable con sciousuess that my my shirt sleeves were too short ; or wauting altogether. Everthing finished, in the way of toi let, Bob Styles took me into his light wagon, drove me over to D , by a se cluded route, and left me at the hotel where the sailing party was to assemble. Several of the picnickers were already there, and thcy greeted my cavalier with cordiality, (everybody knew Bob Styles) asking if he was going with them. He told them he was not. "Pressing business engagements you know and all that sort of thing. Deuced sorry I can't go though. I just had time to bring Mips Lee over, and now I m off. Mr. Bimby this is Miss Lee. Miss With-: ergall, Miss Lee," and then rattled off a long string of brief introductions, which convinced me that but few of the compa ny were acquainted with the young lady whom I was thus personating a very fortunate thing for the preservation of my disguise. Mr. Bimby, a tall, IcgaJ-looking man with a hook-nose, and eye-glass and puffy hair, seemed to be prepossessed with my personalle, and I overheard him whisper to Bob Styles, as he went out : "Nice looking girl, that Miss Leo." "Yes,w answered Bob with a mischiev ous glance at me, "she is a nice girl, though a little go-a-head sometimes. Keep a little lookout on her will you," then lowering his voice said : "not a bad match for you, old fellow, she is rich." "Is she 7" said Bimby, his interest deepening. "On my honor," replied Bob. "Forty thousand dollars in her own right. Day day I" and he was gone. Maggie Lee, artful creature that she was, had told her father that the sailing party was to assemble at another hotel, and thither he had taken her. Having business in D , he left her there, merely saying that ho would send the carnage for her in tho evening. She like a dutiful daughter kissed him, and bid him good-bye, and before he had got a hundred rods, got into Bob Styles' light wagon, which had driven up to the back door as Mr. Lee's drove from the front, and the old story of head-strong lovo and unprejudiced age was enacted over again. As for us of the pic-nic excursion we had a delightful sail down to the Grove, but somehow, I could not enjoy it as much as I ought to have done. When I walked on board the boat, I felt awkward, as if everybody was looking at me. I found Mr. Bimby, as I had suspected, a young and, rising lawyer, mighty in Black atone and his own opinon. He insisted on paying my faro (the boat was a regu lar excursion packet) and purchasing c nough oranges, pears and candies, to set up a street-stand. Four or five times I was on the point of swearing at his impu dent officiousncss, but bit my tongue just in time to prevent my exposure. But it was not with him that I found my role the hardest to play. No ; the young ladies wore the difficult ones to deceive. For instance there was one among them, a beautiful girl of sev enteen, just returned from boarding school, who had not seen Maggie Leo for three years. Of course she was delight edjto see me, when she found that I was Maggie Lee, which by the way, did not occur until we had started. She threw herself into my arms, pulled my veil aside, nnd kissed me a dozen times, in a man ner thqfc made my finger ends tingle for an hour. It was all very nice, but if I had becn; in jiropria personctj I would l l-l-litn l " i -rr,. warrant for my arrest on that ground at any moment. A whole knot of crinoline then sur rounded me, on the upper deck of the boat, to the utter exclusion and conse quent disgust of Mr. Bimby and all the other gentlemen. I kept very quiet, on ly speaking in monosyllables, in a falset to voice ; but the others la 1 bless you ! how they gabbled I Under a strict prom ise of secresy, the little boarding school maiden who had kissed me so affection ately, revealed all ber love affairs, and al so became very unpleasantly confidential about other matters innocent enough in Lthemselves; but not customarily talked or between ladies and gentlemen. I was terribly embarrassed, but it would not do to give up then. As soon as my my trick should become known Bob Styles' would come out, and news of that kind travels fast in the country, ho and his lady-love would be telegraphed and follow ed before they could reach Philadelphia, where Styles lived and where the knot was to be tied. Tho river breeze was very fresh where we sat and I noticed that several of the ladies were glancing uneasily at mo. I couldn't divine tho reason, untifJJennie, my little friend from boarding school, laid her face dangerously olose to mine, and whispered : "My dear Maggie, your dress is blow ing up terribly high your ankles will bo town talk with the gentlemen 1" Now I was conscious of having a very small foot for a man, and had donned a pair of open worked stockings which came up nearly to my waist, with a pair of gai ters borrowed irom a servant girl, in all of which toggery my "running gear" looked quite feminine and respectable j but the idea of the gentlemen talking a bout my ankles, and ot being addressed thus by a young lady, who would have been frightened to death if I had told her the same thing yesterday, was too much for me. I burst into a sort of strangulated laugh, which I could only check by swallowing half of my filagree lace edged handkerchief. The young la dies all looked at me in apparent astonish ment at such a voice and I wanted to laugh all the more. Fortunately Mr. Bimby came to my rescue at the moment and edged himself in among the crinoline. "May I sit here ?" he asked, pointing to a low stool near me. "Certainly," I simpered in my high falsetto. Ah, thank you," said Bimby with a lackadasical air which nauseated me, as coming from one man to another "you are as kind as you are fascinating I" "l'ou flatter me !" "I ? No, indeed, praise of you cannot be flattery, Miss Lee." "Oh, sir, really you are a very naugh ty man," I said in the most feminine tone I could command. He cast a languishing glance at me through the black lace veil, and I fairly began to fear for his feelings. We soon arrived at the grove, and found our band engaged beforehand awaiting us. Of course dancing was tho first amusement, and lawyer Bimby led me out for a schottische. It was hard at first for me to take a lady's part in the dance, but I soon got accustomed to it. A waltz was proposed and I resolved to have a littlo amusement at the expense of the unfortunate Mr. Bimby. I had first made him purposely jealous by dancing with two other young fellows, one of whom I knew in ray own charac ter, but who never suspected me as Mag gie Lee. The young man was a great woman killer a sort of easy devil-may-care rascal, who made the ladies run af ter him, by his alternate warmth of ac tion and coolness of protestation. I se lected him to "play off" against my legal admirer. I allowed him to hold on to me very closely, and occasionally looked at him with a half-fascinating expression. When we stopped he led me to my scat, keeping his arm about my waist, and I permitted it. Having thusstirred Bimby up to wrath ful feats of valor, I asked one of the gen tlemen to direct the musicians to play a waltz. Bimby came immediately. "Ahem I Miss Lee, shall I have the honor of of trying a waltz with you V I smiled a gracious acquaintance and we commenced. Now I am an old stager at waltzing. I can keep up longer than any non-professional dancer, male or female, whom I ev er met. As long as the Cachuca or Schounebrunnen rings in my ears, I can go on, if it is a year. Not so with Bimby. He plead want of practice and aaid that bo soon got 1 dizzy. "Ah-a, old boy," thought 1, "X il give you a turn then I" But I only smiled, and said that I should probably get tired first. "Oh, yes 1" he exclaimed. "Of course I can waltz as long as any one lady, but not much more." For the first three minutes my cavalier did well. He went smoothly and evenly, but at the expiration of that timo bogan to grow warm. Five minutes elapsed, and Bimby's breath came harder and har der. On we went, however, and I scorn ed to notice his slackening up at every round, when wo passed my scat. After some ten or twelve minutes, tho wrctohed man gasped out between his stops : "Ah, are are you not get getting very tired. nave hkcu ic Deiier. iis it was j. icit as if I was "obtaining goods under false pre tences," and lawyer Bimby might issue a "Oh no I" I burst forth, as coolly aM if we were riding around the room, "I feel as if I Could waltz all night " Ihe look of despair that ho gave was terrible to sec. I was bound to see him through, hoW ever, and we kept at it. Bimby staggered and made wild steps in all directions. His shirt collar wilted, his eyes protruded his jaw hung down ; and, altogether, I saw he could not hold out much longer. "This is delightful," said I, "and you Mr. Bimby, waltz so easily I" " Puff puff ah puff-- yes eh puff very puff--dolightful," he-gasped "Don't you think it ought to go a littltf faster?" Ho rolled his eyes heavenward in agJ- ny. "Ah, puff puff I don't ah puff don't know." So when we ncared the musicians. I said : "Faster if vou nlcasn faster." snrl they played a la whirlwind4 Poor Bimby threw his feet about like fast pacer, and revolved after the manner of a teetotum nearly run down. At last he staggered a step backwards, and spin- mog eccentrically away Irom me, pitched headlong in tho midst of a bevy of young ladies in a corner. I turned around cool ly, walked to my seat, and sent the young woman killer after a glass of ice-water. The miserable lawver recovered his senses just in timo to see me thank his rival for the water. t some idea from this of the fun ladies have in tormenting us poor fellows of the other sex. At thTs -juncture, and before Mr. "Bim by had time to apologize for his accident, little Jennie came running into the pa villion which served as a ball room. As she came near, I perceived that her hands were clutched tightly in her dress, and I positively shuddered as she whis pered to me : "Oh, Maggie ! come and help me fU my skirts they are all coming down. What should I do ? I was in agony A cold perspiration broke out upon my forehead. I wished myself a thousand miles away and anethematized. Bob Styles' masquerading projeot inwardly, with fearful maledictions. I said I was tired out could not some one else go 7 No nothing would do but I must ac company her to the house of a gentleman who owned the grove, and assist her to arrange her clothing. So I went. What if it Bhould be necessary to re move the greater part of her raiment ? What if she should' tell me to do some sewing ? - What if in the midst of all the embarrassments of being closeted with a beautiful girl of seventeen, in a stato of comparative freedom from drapery, my real sex and identy should be discovered by her 7 I felt as if an apopletio fit would be ft fortunate occurrence for me just then. However, I nerved myself up for tho task, and accompanied Jennie to tho house designated. An old lady showed us into her chamber, and Jennie, heaving a sigh of relief, let go her dress. As she did so, a pardon my blushes petticoat fell to tho floor. She was about to pro ceed, but I alarmed her by a sudden, and vehement gesture. "Stop I" I cried frantically and forget ting my alsetto; "stop ! don't uadresa for God's sake !" She opened her great brown eyes to their widest extent. "And whynot 7" "Because I am I am acan. yon. keep a secret 7" "Why, yes ! How frightened you hok I Why, what i3 tho matter Maggie 7 yon why oh I oh 1 oh I" And she gave threo aoreams. "Hush I No noiao, or I am lost P I exclaimed, putting my hand over kef mouth. "I swear I mean no harm ; ifl had I would not have stopped you. Don't you see 7" She was all of a tremble poor Utile thing ; but sho saw tho force ot my argm ment. "Oh, sir," Bho said, "I see you arc ft man ; but what does it all moan ? Wfc did you dress so ?" I told her the story as briefly as possi ble, after exacting from her a promise of the most sacred secresy I then went outside the door, and wsi .ted till she had arranged her dress when she called me again. bho had heard of me from Maggie and others, and wanted! to hear the particulars ; so I safc down by her, and wo had a long talk, which ended in mutual feelings of friendliness and old acquaintanceship, quite wonderful for people meeting for the first time. Just as wo started to go back to tho pavilion, I said I must relieve my mind of just ons more burden. "And what is that V she said. Thoso kisses. You thoaght I was Maggie Leo, or you would not have given them. They were vory sweet, but! sap pose I must give them back " And I did. Sho blushed n good deal, but she did&'t resist, only when I got through, slrt glanoed up and said : 4- "I think you are real naughty, any how." When Wo retarded, I foritid lawyer Bimby quite recoverod from his disainesi and all hatlds ready for supper, which was served in the ball room, t sal-be tween Bimby and Jennie I and ttade-letel to both in turn. After supper at which I astonished a great many by edting rath- 9 .